It's probably been covered later in the thread but someone was asking about tracking an st with a larger turbo vs. A hybrid. I'm sure a gt2554r is much less stress on motor for track day than a hybrid. Moving the torque peak up in rpm, a lot in the case of some. Is a big help. Also, you guys aren t doing things like monitoring manifold backpressure vs boost pressure, but I'm sure these hybrids with the giant wheels clipped to hell stuffed into that tiny hot housing are creating insane backpressure in manifold. Its just a healthier setup to have a real engineered turbo system. Not stuffing a 28 or 30lbs/min comp wheel into a turbo paired with an exhaust side that is insanely undersized. These little heads must really process incoming air. Because thats a recipe for surge. You have insane bqxkpressure vs,manifold pressure when your shooting for as close to 1:1 as possible. And yoyu have a very low but strong torque peak. Not to mention a hybrid will never have the durability of an off the shelf turbo from a major manufacturer. Bb turbos are especially durable if you are feeding them proper oil pressure and design your drain correctly. Keeping torque around 260 or so and moving it up the power band with a larger exhaust housing amdnhigh flow wheel that isn't causing insane pressure ratios, combined with other track appropriate upgrades, I think these little cars will do well with and a larger aftermarket turbo. But i wouldnt tracl a car with 300+ hp ona stock fuel system and lower end probably. Your just rinning too close to the limits dor a track. What is fine on the street isnt neccessarliy gonna work running wide open in 2 or 3 sesseions a day, or a whole weekend. The factory stuff is finished to a high quality. Has high end anti fatigue coatings and processes applied. But it's not stout stuff that can handle 300+ tq all weekend long at the track for years on end. I've had a blast in mine basically stock with pads,fluid, and drop in oil cooler and radiator upgrade. These little cars can definatly punch above their weight. Luckily they can carry their speed though, cause stock, if you ever had to slow down, it take half a lap to accelerate back up to pace! Im probably going to do the mountune turbo i think. Susoension im more worried about. These cars are not overly, stiff, but they transfer weight quickly and well and are so balanced to rotate. I even went back to the own Bridgestone because too much grip just brought out all the bad fwd traits. So im really going back and forth on suspension. I may just try a set of bilstein on stock springs first. That was long winded but to sum it up, the poor quality, super high drive pressures, and low rapid torque peak are all things that will hurt durability in long term high load situations like the track. Are far as susoension, their doesn't seem to be a lot of good info on good setups. I'm not into spending 20k on a set of coilovers for a car that was that much new. And most coilovers in the 1000 to 3000 range are garbage and overly stiff, especially for a car that gets it's speed the way the fiesta does.